The amendment will be put into practice as of Friday, with prosecutors
able to act independently in cases of the possession of small quantities
of narcotics.

Agnieszka Sieniawska, head of the Polish Drug Policy Network (PSPN), told
Polish Radio’s press agency (IAR) that the new system will be quicker,
cheaper and more efficient.

Meanwhile, a person arrested for possession can be immediately referred to
a therapist, with prosecutors now compelled to gather information on the
scale of the user’s problem.This need not take place at the police station
itself.

Barbara Wilamowska from the National Bureau for Drug Prevention (KBPN)
believes that the new system will lead to fewer prosecutions.

Nevertheless, penalties for drug-trafficking have been increased under the
new amendment.

Two Polish Nobel Prize laureates, former president Lech Walesa and poet
Wislawa Szymborska, signed a statement last month calling for lighter
punishments for those arrested for personal use.

The newly formed Palikot’s Movement, a liberal party which won a surprise
10 percent share of the vote in the 9 October general election, is
championing full legalisation of soft drugs.

However, Prime Minister Donald Tusk, head of the current coalition
government, has declared that his party (Civic Platform) is against such a
policy. (nh/pg)

The European Coalition for Just and Effective Drug Policies, is a pan-European network of currently 140 NGO’s and individual experts involved in the drug issue on a daily base. We are the European section of an International Coalition, which consists of more than 200 NGOs from around the world that have adhered to a Manifesto for Just and Effective Drug Policies (established in 1998). Among our members are organisations of cannabis and other drug users, of health workers, researchers, grassroot activists as well as companies.